I feel my school had a bad legal writing program. I already graduated, but am not sure if my writing is up to par. Does anybody have any suggestions on how to improve my writing/communication skills. My grammar is fine, I am looking more at sentence structure and vocabulary improvement. Where can I find good examples of legal writing? (I did law school part time, so I didn't have the traditional summer jobs or internships to practice this in a work setting).

A few possibilities:* Supreme Court opinions, especially from Justices who are/were particularly respected for their writing.* US Solicitor General's Office briefs (https://www.justice.gov/osg/supreme-court-briefs).* Any other briefs from top appellate lawyers in private practice (SCOTUS briefs are linked on SCOTUSblog).

You could also consider reading a book on legal writing, such as:* Basically anything by Bryan Garner* Any of the bajillion books on legal writing on Amazon

Reading bad briefs is also sometimes instructive, just to see ways in which legal writing can go wrong. Clicking at random through briefs before a state appeals court (even a state supreme court) will probably get you some bad briefs by experienced lawyers. Many state supreme courts post the briefs on their websites.

I honestly find legal writing so subjective. I've incorporated Garnder's principles, only to have partners (and my judge as a clerk) strike the principles I incorporated. Best way to improve legal writing? Probably clerking or any position in which you are tasked with heavy writing and editing assingments.

Yeah, the best way to become a better writer is to write a lot in a setting where you have to edit yourself and/or have someone edit it. It's really the only way to work out how to apply broad principles of legal writing in practice.

In my experience, the most common "bad writing" mistakes are fixed when students do the following:

(1) Learn what "passive voice" is, and how to fix it(2) Stop trying to sound overly-legal/using nonsense lawyer phrases and words(3) Adhere as strictly as possible to the IRAC/CRAC format(4) Encapsulate your entire argument in one sentence, and make that your heading(5) Aim for sentences of about 15 words or less on average

Caveat: I am talking almost exclusively about briefs/advocative writing. I'm not an expert on corporate memos and the such